LouisianaVoice v. LA. DOA goes to trial Monday; we need your help to defray legal costs that will continue on appeal

LouisianaVoice needs your support—moral and financial—now more than ever.

The trial on our lawsuit against the Division of Administration begins on Monday (May 4) as we try to hold the administration accountable on the production of public records so that we may keep you informed on events as they take place.

Unfortunately, this administration is trying to see to it—deliberately, we are convinced, that we are not able to provide vital information about the machinations of your state government in a timely manner.

We have already told you about the records request we submitted simultaneously with an identical request by the House Legislative Service Office. The legislature got its records—the same ones we requested—within 10 days; we didn’t get ours until three months later and then only after we filed our lawsuit.

The Division of Administration (DOA) is currently sitting on another request or ours. We again made simultaneously requests of DOA and an office under DOA. The office in question responded with the records within three days or our request. It’s been nearly two weeks and we’re still waiting for DOA to comply.

This is the battle we fight almost daily with the Jindal administration—and they have said in their response to our lawsuit that they do not deliberately delay complying with our requests, that they do not single us out for delay.

That simply does not square with what a former DOA employee told us: DOA routinely gets our requested records and simply stacks them in a corner for weeks at a time before notifying us that we may inspect them.

But even more absurd, in its response to our petition, DOA claims that I have not suffered monetary loss, so the court should not assess damages against the state.That is in direct contradiction to the statute which sets fines of $100 per day for non-compliance. Period. The statute makes no mention of any requirement that the one requesting the records suffer monetary loss as a prerequisite for the assessment of a fine.

Were it not for quick access to the legislature’s public records (which are readily available, with no delay tactics or word games) by LouisianaVoice, that $55,000-a-year retirement pay raise for State Police Col. Mike Edmonson would have gone through.

Were it not for acquisition of public records from the Department of Education (in another, successful lawsuit) by LouisianaVoice, private records of hundreds of thousands of Louisiana public school students would have been made available to Rupert Murdoch of Fox News.

This is what we do.

And it costs money and untold hours of dogged research.

To continue our legal fight, we need your help.

If we win on Monday, DOA is certain to appeal.

If DOA wins, we most certainly will appeal. They believe they can starve us out with legal costs but we won’t back down.

Either way, the costs are going to continue to climb from what we’ve already laid out in expenses.

Please click on the button (not here, but near the top right part of our web page) to donate by credit card.

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10 Responses

And the administration knew it would come to this and that we would not have the revenue to fight this. They have the upper hand because they have the “system” on their side. They surely have played it enough times, to be experts at legal corruption. At the retired state employee convention @Paragon in Marksville, some of us contributed for this cause. I hope others decide to contribute to keep fighting this appeal after appeal. We need to band together. Let’s pray that we have a good outcome Monday so that citizens of this state can have hope that if they contribute, it will not be in vain and perhaps something can be done. We might not get our OGB money back, but darn, we need to stop this administration from ruining us completely.

Thanks, Tom for shining the light of day on this corrupt practice of ignoring public records requests. Check is in the mail.
Sure would be nice to get SOME mainstream local news coverage of this situation with respect to lack of access to public records that has existed for 7 years. Clancy Dubos? Lee Zurik? Anyone?

Thanks for the “preview” update, Robert. Although I was a devoted fan of Jim Engster’s 9 a.m. show on WRKF, I pretty much am never able to listen to his new show in the afternoon, plus I have a problem with the political leaning of the station now airing his show and commercial talk radio, in general..

I was not surprised at the Kennedy endorsement and think his motivation is obvious. I also think John Kennedy would represent us well in the U. S. Senate. I knew David Vitter when he was a young Louisiana legislator and was impressed with his intellect and enthusiasm for public office. I am not a fan of his now, though I would like to be able to give him the benefit of the doubt.

Hopefully, Tom will do a detailed story on what happened at court and I will look forward to it.

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Thank you.
Tom Aswell, Publisher

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